In the city of St. Louis, more than half of the nearly 2,000 homicides between 2014 and 2023 went unsolved. The Marshall Project and St. Louis Public Radio spent time with six of the many families who have yet to see justice, exploring themes of remembrance and healing. We asked each of the families what they’ll always remember about their loved one and how they want the community to remember them.
While many of their cases have gone quiet, each family is still fighting to keep their child’s memory alive. Drawing inspiration from photos, videos, and family interviews, local artist Cbabi Bayoc created vibrant portraits imbued with traces of each young person’s life and values. The meaning of certain symbols is obvious; other details are designed to be understood only by those who knew the person well.
As a collection, the portraits are intended to honor the thousands lost to violence, and what they meant to those who loved them.
Here are their stories.
Whitney Brown
Whitney Brown was an eldest daughter, the caregiver and nurse of her family and community, who welcomed anyone in need into her home and loved her son fiercely. She was killed in St. Louis on Aug. 13, 2015.
Mario Fox
Mario Fox was passionate about neuroscience, curious about computer science, and a devoted father and brother who rarely left home without his pocket dictionary. He was killed in St. Louis on March 5, 2018.
Courtney Williams
Courtney Williams was an avid football player and wrestler, a man of faith, and a proud father and older brother. He was killed in St. Louis on Christmas Eve, 2014.
Tyrin Williams
Tyrin Williams was a celebrated high school athlete who could turn anything into a basketball hoop and dreamed one day of becoming a coach and teacher. He was killed in St. Louis on March 28, 2016.
Jared Elam
Jared Elam was an ever-smiling teenager, wise beyond his 17 years and committed to bringing his family together. After graduating high school, he planned to start his own business. He was killed in St. Louis on Sept. 4, 2014 — two days shy of his 18th birthday.
Isis Mahr
Isis Mahr was 19 1/2 years old, a dancer, soccer player, and recent high school graduate training to become a nurse, who was a fixture at her local rec center along with her siblings. She was killed in St. Louis on Oct. 21, 2021.
Community Resources
Each conversation with family members raised important questions about justice and healing long after a homicide case goes cold. Many families explained that they did not know what to expect from police during the initial investigation into the killing of their loved one. Others shared the simple steps law enforcement took that made a difference during the difficult search for a suspect. Most wished there was more grief counseling available to address the lingering effects of their traumatic loss.
We’ve distilled their reflections into a series of guides, presenting the families’ advice in their own words. Each resource offers guidance to anyone who has lost someone to violence — in St. Louis and beyond.
How Do You Grieve the Victim of an Unsolved Homicide? Ask the People Who’ve Been Through It.
We Asked Families of Homicide Victims What They Want From the Police. Here’s What They Said.
What You Need to Know About Homicide Investigations
Credits
EDITORIAL DIRECTION
Raghuram Vadarevu
Nicole Lewis
Brian Munoz, STLPR
REPORTING
Ivy Scott
Brian Munoz, STLPR
Rachel Lippmann, STLPR
ILLUSTRATIONS
Cbabi Bayoc
ART DIRECTION
Marci Suela
Raghuram Vadarevu
WEB DESIGN
Alex Rice, STLPR
Katie Park
Aithne Feay
AUDIO EDITING AND MIXING
Greg Munteanu, STLPR
Brian Munoz, STLPR
MUSIC
Drake Stafford, STLPR
AUDIENCE ENGAGEMENT
Ashley Dye
Rachel Kincaid
Lara Hamdan, STLPR
COPY EDITING AND PRODUCTION
Mara Corbett
Ghazala Irshad
Lauren Hardie
Bob Cronin, STLPR
EVENT COORDINATION
Brian Munoz, STLPR
Leslie Davis, STLPR
Sophie Broz, STLPR
MARKETING AND DESIGN
Cristina Fletes-Mach, STLPR
Madalyn Painter, STLPR
Fontella Bradford, STLPR
Ebony Reed